Aden Sickle
New member
Lizards for example can move each eye ball individually and thus their brain process each image separately. I realize the technically each eye sees it's own image, but they are essentially the same thing and the brian puts them together, this is how we can tell distances. I saw a program on the Science channel in which a man built special goggles that inverted his vision. Amazingly after a while his brain learned to invert the images and he was able to see normal with the goggles on. Which makes me wonder if a person where to ear something like a virtual reality helmet in which each eye received a different image, would the brain adapt and be able to separate each image and allow a person to see two different things at once with out the weird halo effect on gets when one places a physical block between the eyes?